You are on page 1of 5

Elements of the Sports Feature

Second course, Third grading period, Weeks 4-5


Beyond the day-to-day grind of games, matches and showdowns, there are the hidden stories. These
are the stories that go beyond scores and statistics and are more than news and play-by-play. These
stories capture the emotions that flow through sports: passion and pain, desire and dedication. Capturing these emotions, these feelings and these stories will take audiences beyond just listening for
the score of last nights game.

Enduring Understanding
The sports feature is an essential aspect of sports coverage, meant to complement and add human
interest and meaning to day-to-day coverage of sporting events.

Essential Questions
What are the principles needed to put together an effective and compelling sports feature? How important are reportorial, explanatory, narrative and descriptive modes to sports features?

Objectives and Outcome


Students will gain an understanding of the elements of a compelling sports feature and, by the end
of the term, conceptualize and produce their own sports feature pieces.

Suggested Time
Two weeks

Resources and Materials


Teachers should compile several compelling sports features broadcast, print and radio for use
and demonstration in class. An excellent example of a print feature story can be found in the July 5,
2005, edition of The Washington Post sports section, entitled A Legendary Career That Speaks for
Itself at www.washpost.com/nie. In Lessons select From Print to Air.
Former President Had A Passion for Sports; He Played Football, Announced Baseball by William
Gildea, The Washington Post, June 6, 2004 at www.washpost.com/nie. In Lessons select From
Print to Air.
RTNDA, Edward R. Murrow national and regional awards in Sports Reporting (www.rtnda.org)
Professional models for sports features include NPRs John Feinstein, Frank Deford (commentary) and
Tom Goldman (reporter).
State press association competition winners
Features, Radio Production, page 180.
Features and Documentaries, Writing for Television, Radio and New Media, pages 181-186.
D.C. Public Schools CTE Prime Movers RTNDF

Radio Curriculum Second Course


2.20.0 Elements of the Sports Feature

Procedure
1. Review with students the What is News? handout from the All Thats News lesson (First
course, First grading period). Discuss the news elements and how they apply to sports and
especially sports features. Have students identify news and a feature story ideas for each news
element. Examples:
A. Proximity: News U.S. Olympics teams have been formed. Human Interest A hometown athlete qualifies for the Olympics or
B. Emotions/Determination: News Increase in high school sports injuries reported. Human
Interest A local football player struggles to overcome a life-threatening injury and
return to the field.
2. Discuss the various modes or approaches available for feature writing such as explanatory, narrative, descriptive, and reportorial. Give students a copy of Sports Talk. Discuss the examples and
give students the homework assignment.
Don Hewitt, producer of 60 Minutes, is quoted in Writing for Television, Radio and New Media: The
key to 60 Minutes success is a combination of good old reporting and recognizing people who have
an ability to tell stories rather than simply reporting an event.
Share with students a radio feature in which the modes of explanation, narration, description and
reporting are included or listen to excerpts of sports features from various sources and discuss the
advantages and benefits of each example:
When does the feature need information from reporting?
When does the person, place or event need to be described so the listener can visualize what
the reporter sees?
When do actions or statistics need explanation?
When is the feature writer primarily a storyteller?
The following recipients of RTNDA 2006 regional recognition might be used as well as examples of
your states press association contests and recently aired features:

2006 Edward R. Murrow, Sports Reporting Region 5


Carrying Her Weight (www.kbia.org/news/murrow.htm)
A Columbia, Mo., teenage girl joins a weightlifting class out of summer boredom. If heard in
the previous lesson to deconstruct its structure, listen now for the modes that are used.

2006 Edward R. Murrow, Sports Reporting Region 6


Beep Baseball (www.kuhf.org/site/News2?id=12978)
Baseball played by 12 vision-impaired players

2006 Edward R. Murrow, Best Sports Reporting Region 1


Stitch and Pitch (www.kiro710.com/Article.asp?id=234213&spid=9623)
Dont forget the fans. We hear the Mariners game as backdrop for this delightful feature that
balances word play with actualities. Although it may appear to be unstructured, this feature
has a carefully orchestrated order that covers the topic one stitch at a time.

D.C. Public Schools CTE Prime Movers RTNDF

Radio Curriculum Second Course


2.20.0 Elements of the Sports Feature

3. Discuss with students the importance of grabbing the reader in the first part of the feature, and
how the news lede plays into that concept. How do the ledes from newspaper sports stories draw in
the reader? How does the first minute of a television or radio feature pull in a viewer or listener?
Which of the features just heard had the most captivating opening 30 seconds?
4. Statistics are a vital part of features as well as game stories. Sports revolve around statistics
the score, points scored by individuals, minutes played and career records. How can statistics be
used effectively in the sports feature? Some stories revolve solely around statistics, such as a player
breaking a statistical record (most home runs, most touchdowns, most rebounds). Some combine
personality, talent, statistics, and comparisons (Features about Tiger Woods, Barry Bonds and Ronaldinho might be used as examples).
5. Read with students Former President Had A Passion for Sports; He Played Football, Announced
Baseball, the Ronald Reagan story from The Washington Post. Discuss all of the feature elements
that exist in the story. What type of lede does the author use? What tone does the story use? Discuss
the background of the article and why it was written (news peg). (In the days following the death of
Ronald Reagan, section editors of newspapers around the country were featuring stories from various
angles presenting the former president and the different roles he played in his long life.) How does
the author use numbers and figures to strengthen the story for the reader? (The author uses a timeline, using dates to develop the sports angle of Reagans life.) Discuss how numbers and statistics
play into the sports feature.
How would this newspaper story be told on radio? What are the essential quotations of Ronald Reagan
(actualities) archived on tape that you would hope to use? What parts could easily be paraphrased?
6. Discuss with students pace and tone and how they affect a feature. What tone and pace should
be used for a feature about a famous, beloved athlete who has passed away? How would that tone
differ from that of a feature about the first woman racecar driver winning a major event?
7. Interviews, quotations (audio, actualities) and personal anecdotes by sports figures also play a
central role in the sports feature. Any good story needs solid quotations. How would interviewing an
athlete, a coach or any other sports figure for a feature differ from interviewing the same person for
a game story? Using the feature examples, examine the quotations in the story. For example, in the
Vin Scully story, a quotation begins, I listened to him every night, fell asleep to that voice. What
question might the author have asked to generate that comment? How does the mood and feeling of
that quote play into the mood that the author is trying to create in the feature?
Examine actualities in radio stories to drive home this concept to students. Teachers should collect
examples from current sports features from local stations, national broadcasts and organizations recognizing sports broadcasting excellence.
2006 Edward R. Murrow, Best Sports Reporting Region 3 and
2006 Edward R. Murrow, Feature Reporting Region 3
The Hyzdu Diaries: The Life and Times of a Career Minor Leaguer
(www.kjzz.org/news/arizona/archives/200604/murrowawards)
This RTNDA-recognized piece has at its core Hyzdu reading from his diary, but its power and
strong human-interest appeal comes from the interviews with members of his family.
D.C. Public Schools CTE Prime Movers RTNDF

Radio Curriculum Second Course


2.20.0 Elements of the Sports Feature

8. Discuss the order in which actualities, facts and background information influence the impact of
a piece. The Carrying Her Weight handout in this lesson could be used to illustrate this concept.
Form groups of four to five students. Duplicate copies of Carrying Her Weight (one per group) and
cut into strips. Students move the strips around to put the feature in order. Groups then reveal and
discuss the order they would recommend. Play the selection (www.kbia.org/news/murrow.htm). Students could be given Carrying Her Weight Discussion Questions as homework or class discussion.
9. Having provided a foundation in sports features, give students their assignment. They are to
begin to produce a sports feature piece three to four minutes in length including actualities from
three interviews, copy using the modes discussed, and a scene description. Students should develop
their story idea, angle and list of interviewees and review them with the instructor. Teachers might
ask students questions to help with conceptualization of the features and development of a unique
angles in each story. The tone and length of each feature should reflect its subject.
Teachers may modify this assignment by inviting one guest to be interviewed by the class. This may
be a former star athlete or retired coach from your school, a current scholar-athlete, or the spouse
of one of your coaches someone whose story lends itself to a feature approach or is connected
to a larger news/sports event that students will cover. All students will prepare questions for the
20-minute interview and will select actualities from the same tape. Students still have to define the
focus of their pieces and each student will determine two more people to interview.
10. At the end of this two-week period, students will be introduced to the public affairs feature in a
two-week period. At the end of both two-week introductory lessons, students will have conceptualized features, conducted three interviews and done some research on the focus of their features.
The final project will take time and effort for students to produce. Teachers will need to decide which
of the following approaches (or a variation) they want to take:
Students will be pushed to complete the sports feature assignment. It will be produced in this
two-week period. Teachers will have two weeks to evaluate and return to students before the
end of the public affairs lesson.
Students will prepare to produce a sports feature through research, interviewing and conceptualization steps. Then there will be a break while teachers present the public affairs feature
lesson.
Students will be pushed to complete public affairs features in the two-week period.
Teachers will follow the Facing Public Affairs lesson suggestions, which include three edits
of interviews to hone students skills in hearing the hot tape and editing to meet time requirements. At the end of the lesson, students decide whether to continue with the public affairs
features or return to the sports features to produce them.
If students have two first draft features, they will decide which of the two to re-edit and
refine for the end-of-term project.
For the end-of-term project, each student will produce either a sports feature or a public affairs feature.

Homework
Complete the writing for ear exercise in Sports Talk and listen to sports features for examples of
each mode. Carrying Her Weight Discussion Questions could be completed as homework.
D.C. Public Schools CTE Prime Movers RTNDF

Radio Curriculum Second Course


2.20.0 Elements of the Sports Feature

Arranging interviews and composing interview questions could be homework. Through this project,
students will be asked to apply skills they have gained so far: interviewing, recording, writing a script
and editing.

Assessment
At this stage, students should have written interview questions, conducted three interviews and
conceptualized sports features. In the final project, students should be expected to effectively incorporate all of the essential elements of a good feature, such as an appealing lede, effective use
of statistics and figures, appropriate pace and tone and engaging writing and choice of audio. All of
these elements should match the intent of the story. Do students have a sense of the elements of a
good feature and do they demonstrate it in their stories? An ideal way to assess the understanding
and proficiency of each feature would be to use a rubric in evaluating each students performance.

Academic Content Standards


Knowledge: Journalism teachers understand: 7. The writing process as it relates to journalism (brainstorming, questioning, reporting, gathering and synthesizing information, writing, editing, and
evaluating the final media product) (Standards for Journalism Educators, Provided by the Journalism
Education Association and the Scholastic Journalism Division of the Association for Education in
Journalism and Mass Communication)
Recognize and apply mathematics in contexts outside of mathematics (Connections, National Council
of Teachers of Mathematics)
Formulate original, open-ended questions to explore a topic of interest; design and carry-out research (DCPS English Language Arts, 11.R.1)
Develop the narrative elements with concrete sensory details and language (e.g., visual details of
scenes; descriptions of sounds, smells, specific actions; movements and gestures; interior monologue
or feelings of characters), and effectively pace the presentation of actions to accommodate time/
mood changes (DCPS English Language Arts, 12.W.1)

Industry Standards and Expectations


Distinguish between different forms of media and their specific applications. (Performance Element,
Pathway KS Statement: Explore career opportunities in Journalism and Broadcasting, States Career
Clusters, National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium)
Define the terminology associated with journalism. (Performance Element, Pathway KS Statement:
Demonstrate writing processes used for various journalism media. States Career Clusters, National
Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium)
Demonstrate writing audio scripts for various types of programs. (Performance Element, Pathway KS
Statement: Apply Knowledge of equipment and skills related to audio production, States Career Clusters, National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium)

D.C. Public Schools CTE Prime Movers RTNDF

Radio Curriculum Second Course


2.20.0 Elements of the Sports Feature

You might also like